Colin Welland. |
Oscar-winning writer and actor Colin
Welland has died aged 81 after suffering from Alzheimer's disease, his
family has announced.
Welland won an Oscar in 1982 for best original screenplay for writing the film Chariots of Fire, about two athletes at the 1924 Olympic Games.
He famously used his acceptance speech to declare: "The British are coming."
As an actor, he won a Bafta for playing the sympathetic English teacher Mr Farthing in Ken Loach's Kes in 1969.
He had found fame earlier that decade when he played PC David Graham in TV police serial Z Cars.
He went on to successfully combine acting and writing, and scooped a Bafta TV Award for writing TV plays in 1971. That year, he also won the Bafta film award for best supporting actor for Kes.
His film writing credits also included 1979's Yanks, which starred Vanessa Redgrave and Richard Gere, and 1985's Twice in a Lifetime.
As an actor, he played a vicar in Dustin Hoffman's 1971 thriller Straw Dogs and appeared in both the TV series and the big screen version of crime drama The Sweeney.
Also on TV, he was an overgrown schoolboy in Dennis Potter's 1979 play Blue Remembered Hills and appeared with Rory Kinnear in 1980s sitcom Cowboys, about incompetent builders.
His Z Cars co-star Brian Blessed paid tribute, describing Welland as "a great writer and a very natural actor".
Blessed said: "He had a tremendous ability for writing. He could write anything, any style.
"And of course he was marvellous in Potter's play Blue Remembered Hills, playing a little tiny boy. An amazing performance. He was very versatile and immensely clever."
Fellow actor David Morrissey tweeted: "Colin Welland RIP. Such a great actor and writer. Kes is my all-time favourite film and he was so wonderful in it. So sad."
Welland, from Liverpool, said his father initially curbed his childhood ambition to act, urging him to become an art teacher instead.
Welland taught in Leigh, Lancashire, before finally pursuing his ambition to act at the age of 26.
"I was going to get married and I thought, if I get married I will lose my opportunities, because responsibilities follow marriage," he said.
His first theatre job was playing the lead in Harold Pinter's The Birthday Party Manchester's Library Theatre.
He then had a three-week stint as a BBC newsreader before joining Z Cars. After three years in Z Cars, he returned to the stage as an actor and writer.
Most of his own plays were set in the north of England and "usually champion the individual against the system", he told BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs in 1973.
"I usually find that it's one man's effort to break through what is usually expected of an individual."
Source: BBC
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